Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to investigate serum levels of the cystatin C (CysC)/creatinine (Cr) ratio and renal serum markers (CysC, Cr, urea, and uric acid [UA]) for different ages and by sex. We also aimed to establish pediatric reference intervals for the serum CysC/Cr ratio. Methods: Serum samples were collected from 4765 healthy children (0–18 years old). Serum markers of renal function were measured, and the CysC/Cr ratio of each participant was calculated and statistically analyzed. Results: The renal marker CysC did not substantially change after 1 year old. Cr, urea, and UA levels generally increased with age. However, the serum CysC/Cr ratio steadily decreased with age. The CysC/Cr ratio showed significant differences in age among all age groups and varied with sex, except for in the 1 to 6-year-old groups. The overall serum CysC/Cr ratio in girls was higher than that in boys. Conclusion: Reference intervals of the serum CysC/Cr ratio in the pediatric population were established. These intervals need to be partitioned by age and sex.
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Liu, C., Wen, J., Xiang, J., Ouyang, X., Yang, Y., Lu, W., … Min, X. (2019). Age- and sex-specific reference intervals for the serum cystatin C/creatinine ratio in healthy children (0–18 years old). Journal of International Medical Research, 47(7), 3151–3159. https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060519855575
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